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To: scratchmyback who wrote (2490)9/25/2002 11:04:08 AM
From: Eric L  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 9255
 
re: Backpedaling on 3G Launches

>> Sonera, Nokia Backpedal on 3G Launch Plans

Joris Evers
IDG News Service
Amsterdam Bureau
ITworld.com
9/25/02

Nokia Corp. and Sonera Corp. will make some 3G (third generation) mobile telephony announcements in Finland on Thursday, but it will be far from the mass market commercial launch of a high-speed mobile network and services they promised earlier this year.

In March, Nokia Mobile Phones Executive Vice President Anssi Vanjoki announced that Europe would see its first mass market 3G introduction on Sept. 26. "We are going for a mass market launch, not a techno launch," he said in a presentation at the CeBIT trade show in Hanover, Germany.

The reality is very different. Nokia will show a new handset that can work on high-speed 3G networks as well as on existing networks, but insiders expect the device won't be in shops until next year because 3G networks are not ready.

Sonera will introduce a service that has the 3G tagline, but is actually offered on existing GSM (Global System for Mobile Communications) and GPRS (General Packet Radio Service) networks. The service will work on phones that support J2ME (Java 2 Micro Edition) and MMS (Multimedia Messaging Service).

"Sonera will launch 3G mobile services. Those will initially operate on the present GSM and GPRS networks, but will operate on the 3G network within the coming months," said Essi Pekkala, a Sonera spokeswoman. Sonera now plans "a limited commercial pilot" of its 3G network early next year, she said.

3G networks allow high-speed, always-on mobile data connections. The industry has promoted services such as video conferencing and streaming video on 3G phones. Java allows small applications to be run on phones, while MMS enables the user to receive picture messages and audio clips, far from video conferencing and movies.

Cash-strapped and debt-laden mobile operators across Europe keep delaying their plans for the rollout of 3G services.

Even Nokia, the world's largest handset maker and one of the leading network vendors, did not foresee the delays when it said 3G would become available in Europe on Sept. 26.

"Nokia anticipated 3G networks to be up and running at this point, but the reality is very different. They committed to the Sept. 26 date because they made such a fanfare about it," said Ben Wood, senior analyst with Dataquest Inc., a unit of Gartner Inc. "This will be a technology launch, not a mass market launch."

Wood expects Nokia to further tone down the 3G hype when the handset maker unveils its first 3G handset on Thursday. 3G won't be a brand new platform for fabulous services, but will be a platform that allows services that are offered today on GSM and GPRS networks to be enriched and work better, he said.

"Nokia will position 3G as being an evolution instead of a revolution, which it was billed to be in the past years. Because of the slowdown in 3G, operators have had to reassess what their service is going to be," he said.

U.K. mobile phone operator mmO2 PLC, which is still doing extensive trials with 3G on the Isle of Man, also sees 3G as an evolution from 2.5G or GPRS.

"2.5G is pretty close to 3G and you can argue for the need of 3G. It is an evolutionary thing. You need 3G when the 2.5G network fills up," an mmO2 spokesman said. "The feedback we are getting from the Isle of Man is that Web browsing, e-mail on the move and online gaming are the most popular. You can get that on 2.5G as well."

Meanwhile, the race to be the first operator in Europe to offer commercial 3G services is still on. Analysts expect 3G services will likely go live first before the end of the year on networks majority-owned by Hong Kong-based Hutchison Whampoa Ltd. in both the U.K. and Italy, with handsets being supplied by NEC Corp. and Motorola Inc. <<

- Eric -



To: scratchmyback who wrote (2490)9/25/2002 11:48:48 AM
From: Eric L  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 9255
 
re: God Send Mobiles!

>> Austria Opens Up 3G Network Without Handsets

Timo Poropudas
Nordic Wireless Watch
September 25, 2002

Mobilkom Austria, the leading mobile operator in Austria, today announced the launch of 3G service. Ericsson and Nortel Networks are the suppliers of the 3G-network infrastructure.

All that is missing now is UMTS/GSM dual mode handsets.

"Our network is ready for the commercial UMTS mobile phones, which the manufacturers will be putting on the market in three to six months. We are inviting the manufacturers to test their terminals in our network, as its already fully functional," says Dr. Boris Nemsic, CEO Mobilkom Austria and COO Wireless Telekom Austria, of the current situation. "We have very specific requirements for the terminals. Only when those requirements are met will we offer third-generation services to customers. That goes equally for quality, selection and quantity."

Mobilkom Austria can finance the UMTS expansion through its own cash flow, having already earned back the GSM investment, according the company press release.

The company is not hurrying with the 3G networks only for glory of being first. It has in its A1 network 2,9 million customers with growing voice and data traffic. The existing GSM network is at full capacity. "The middle-term plan sees UMTS delivering needed capacities," explains Nemsic.

3G service was inaugurated with a live streaming video call between the cities of Vienna and Graz. Approximately 25 percent of the country's population, including most major urban districts, is covered in the initial 3G launch. The company aims to cover 40 percent of the population with about one thousand base stations by the end of the year.

Content will initially be provided through a number of exclusive partnerships between Mobilkom Austria and for example the Austrian public broadcast station ORF, news agency Reuters and leading Austrian on-line sports media channel, sport1.at. <<

- Eric -



To: scratchmyback who wrote (2490)9/25/2002 5:16:57 PM
From: Puck  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 9255
 
Is Mobilkom now offering 3G wireless services commercially? I don't give a crap about networks milestones unless they mean that the operator can now do some business.



To: scratchmyback who wrote (2490)9/27/2002 5:15:12 PM
From: Eric L  Respond to of 9255
 
re: The 2609/0926 6650 WCDMA (and GSM GPRS MMS) Demo

Somewhat as I surmised, Ray Le Maistre, the European Editor of "Unstrung" who was in Helsinki and was in attendance, wrote this about the demo:

>> Following the press conference, various services were on display running on Sonera's GSM and GPRS networks. This is where it was proven that the 6650 does indeed work on a GSM network.

Unstrung was also shown the handset working on "a UMTS network."

Just which UMTS network depends on whom you talk to. Nokia stated that the handsets (one of which was stolen and then recovered!) were running on Sonera's live UMTS network. But talk to the poor guy having to actually show the media how it works, and he says that the "live" 3G network is on the other side of Helsinki, and that the connection to the 6650 is from a test base station. <<

The live 3G network that will provide the public with UMTS access will be truly launched and open for public use "when there are enough phones," according to Sonera.


Based on what Ray (an old hand at this game) writes I would have to class Jean Liou's article as somewhat irresponsible and misleading and it also looks like Mike at MobileComms (another old hand at this game) was a little off base as well.

Here is Ray's article:

>> 3G Redefined, Finnish Style

Ray Le Maistre
European Editor
Unstrung
09.27.02

Something strange happened in Finland yesterday. At a joint press conference in Helsinki, Nokia Corp. (NYSE: NOK) revealed its first 3G dualmode handset, the 6650. But then national telco Sonera Corp. (Nasdaq: SNRA) queered the pitch somewhat with its unique definition of 3G.

According to the carrier, 3G is pretty much anything that isn't voice and SMS.

For instance, according to Sonera, picture messaging is a 3G service. It's just that no one else appears to agree. Apart from Nokia, that is. It's quite prepared to jump aboard the crazy definition bandwagon. So why would the Finns talk themselves into this pointless corner?

To try and save face, it would seem. Earlier this year, Nokia and Sonera picked September 26 as the day they would unveil their 3G talents. Sonera was to commercially launch its UMTS network (a Nokia network, by the way), while Nokia's handsets would display the rich customer-oriented service wonders of UMTS. Nokia even "thought about calling [the handset] the 2609," says Anssi Vanjoki, executive vice president at Nokia Mobile Phones. [Ed. note: I guess it would have been called the 0926 in North America…]

But come the big day, and... well, things just hadn't worked out. Sonera has some UMTS network in place, but it's still undergoing many interoperability tests. Not wanting to let the side down, it announced some new mobile data services, calling them "3G services." However, these new services are currently only available to the public on Sonera's 2G (GSM, GPRS) network. Sonera CEO Harri Koponen says these 3G services are live on the operator's UMTS network. They might well be, but nobody's using that network at the moment, so that's only relevant for test purposes.

Never fear, campers, all is not lost. "The consumers don't have to wait," says Koponen, "as these services work today and are commercially available on the GSM and GPRS network." But if they're 3G services, how come they work on a 2G network? Doesn't that make them, er, 2G services? What, then, are 3G services, asks Unstrung out loud and into a microphone in front of about 200 people?

"Multimedia messaging is a 3G service," proclaims Nokia's Vanjoki, to the audible (mumble, mumble, mumble) bewilderment of the assembled audience. "The 3G networks will offer a richer experience for these services. 2G services are voice and SMS -- services that are circuit-switched."

It's kind of hard to follow that. These guys are deploying terminology in a different way from the rest of the industry, so it's hard to know what to make of the rest of the announcements made at the public press conference.

What Nokia did do was unveil its dualmode phone, which sports the classic Nokia design and is probably destined to win a fair chunk of the W-CDMA market [ed. note: such as it is in 2003]. "It's an important milestone for Nokia to come out with this handset," Paolo Pescatore, senior research analyst at IDC's EMEA wireless and mobile communications division tells Unstrung. "Nokia is trying to take a lead by addressing its target audience. The important thing about this handset is that it allows multitasking. You can maintain a data session with speeds up to 100 kbit/s while taking a voice call. This is a step on from GPRS." And what does Pescatore make of the day's redefinition of 3G? He smiles and says the problem lies in the communication of the message. He is too kind.

A few other points to note in the real world. Nokia says it is about to ship the commercial software that operators need for live UMTS networks that will enable functions such as handover from UMTS to GSM without dropping a call. This will be followed by network tuning and optimization to ready networks for commercial deployment in 2003.

As for the 6650 handsets, Vanjoki told the press conference that the phone was still being tested on UMTS networks, that the beginning of next year would see "commercial testing" of the 6650, and "shipments of commercial volumes would start later in 2003." It will sell in the shops for about the same price as the 7650 picture messaging handset that is already on the market for anything between €250 and €750, depending on the country and the operator subsidy.

Then Vanjoki got carried away and claimed that Nokia "has already sold some of the phones and will continue to sell in increasing numbers." But this was denied by David Watkins, Nokia's European director, Imaging (that's picture phones). "We're not selling them yet, just shipping for trials," said Watkins. Sales through retail outlets are expected to start in the first half of 2003, though in low numbers.

Following the press conference, various services were on display running on Sonera's GSM and GPRS networks. This is where it was proven that the 6650 does indeed work on a GSM network. Unstrung was also shown the handset working on "a UMTS network." Just which UMTS network depends on whom you talk to. Nokia stated that the handsets (one of which was stolen and then recovered!) were running on Sonera's live UMTS network. But talk to the poor guy having to actually show the media how it works, and he says that the "live" 3G network is on the other side of Helsinki, and that the connection to the 6650 is from a test base station. The live 3G network that will provide the public with UMTS access will be truly launched and open for public use "when there are enough phones," according to Sonera.

It was just one of those days, we guess. As IDC's Pescatore says, the problem lies in the communication of the message.

And to cap the day, Sonera CEO Koponen, who says he isn't sure how much of the mothballed Finnish population his UMTS network is covering at the moment, opened his exuberant pitch to the world's media by stating: "You will not be disappointed by the time you leave here today." Wrong again, Harri, wrong again. <<

- Eric -